How to Scout Neighborhoods Virtually for Flip Potential

Let’s break down exactly what to look for on Street View to qualify leads, sniff out opportunities, avoid disasters, and move faster than the competition.

Blogs

Apr 19, 2025

Google Street View is one of the most underused tools in the house flipping business. Sure, every investor knows it exists.

But very few use it to its full potential. Most flippers zoom in to glance at the exterior or the roof, and move on.

But a smart investor knows: there’s a goldmine of intel hidden in those pixels.

In this article, we’ll break down exactly what to look for on Street View to qualify leads, sniff out opportunities, avoid disasters, and move faster than the competition.

Whether you're evaluating leads from PropStream, MLS, wholesalers, or direct mail, this skill will let you pre-screen more properties in less time and with fewer mistakes.

Why Google Street View is a Secret Weapon for Flippers

Think about how much time you’d waste if you physically drove to every property just to check the exterior. With Street View, you can vet 20 houses in 20 minutes without leaving your desk.

But the real power isn’t in the convenience.

The real power lies in your ability to read the street. The cars. The lawns. The fences. The neighboring houses. These elements tell a story that comps and square footage can’t.

Here's what Street View does better than a spreadsheet:

  • Gives you context, is this house the best or worst one on the block?

  • Reveals curb appeal challenges before your contractor ever sets foot there

  • Helps you spot hidden structural issues like grading problems, drainage, or encroachments

  • Lets you qualify a neighborhood without guessing from zip code trends

  • Shows you time-sensitive clues like recent construction or illegal additions

Let’s break down exactly what to look for.

Section 1: Exterior Clues About the Subject Property

Before anything else, you're checking the house itself. What does it actually look like from the street?

The roof

  • Sagging, missing shingles, or visible patchwork = big cost

  • Flat or low-pitched roofs = higher long-term maintenance

  • Older 3-tab shingles = outdated and near end-of-life

The windows

  • Are they original aluminum or vinyl replacements?

  • Cracked or fogged windows hint at insulation or moisture issues

  • Boarded windows = likely vandalism, squatters, or extended vacancy

The foundation & grading

  • Is the home sitting below street level? That’s a drainage red flag

  • Cracks in foundation blocks may be visible if Google’s resolution is high enough

  • Look for erosion near the base, gutters missing or water pooling?

Parking situation

  • Is there a driveway, carport, or garage?

  • Are vehicles parking on dirt or grass? That may affect resale

  • A lack of parking in a dense neighborhood = buyer objection waiting to happen

Paint and siding

  • Faded, chipped, or flaking paint = immediate curb appeal work

  • Mismatched repairs = budget flipper or DIY owner

  • Outdated materials like asbestos shingles = $$$ to replace properly

Section 2: Neighborhood-Level Visuals

Now zoom out. What’s happening around the house? The best flip in the world won’t sell fast in a bad environment.

Look at the neighboring homes

  • Are they updated? New roofs, paint, landscaping?

  • Or are they boarded up, burned out, or have code violations visible?

  • You want your flip to be better than the neighborhood, but not too much better

Trash cans and lawn care

  • Are there overflowing trash cans in the front yard or on the curb year-round?

  • Is the lawn overgrown, patchy, or full of debris?

  • Does it look like pride of ownership or deferred maintenance?

Cars and vehicles

  • Are there broken-down vehicles, RVs, or boats parked in yards?

  • Is every house lined with multiple cars?

  • Clues like this tell you if tenants dominate the area (and how your flip might resell)

Fencing and barriers

  • Are fences tall and secure, or sagging and patchy?

  • Cinder block walls with graffiti = potential for high turnover and vandalism

  • Well-kept fences often signal owner-occupant pride and care

Section 3: Street and Block-Level Trends

You’re not just flipping a house, you’re flipping its location too. Street View helps you analyze the entire street.

Street condition

  • Cracked pavement, potholes, or poor drainage = city neglect

  • Recently paved = potential gentrification or investment by the municipality

Sidewalks

  • No sidewalks? That’s a walkability and safety issue for families

  • Cracked or overgrown sidewalks hint at poor infrastructure investment

Tree cover and shade

  • Mature trees add curb appeal, but may cause root issues

  • No trees at all? Hot summer resale risk

Street parking

  • Are the streets completely full of parked cars?

  • Does every house need street parking because of converted garages?

  • This affects resale and rental value

Section 4: Signs of Investor or Flipper Activity

Smart flippers want to buy ahead of the crowd, not after the street’s already hot. Street View can show you who's already flipping here.

Recent construction or dumpsters

  • Roll-off dumpsters in front yards = active rehab

  • Permit boxes, visible new siding, or new fences = recent flip activity

Mismatched updates

  • Houses with modern paint jobs next to 1950s homes?

  • Look for clusters of flipped homes, 3-4 in a row may indicate a wholesaler is farming this area

For sale or rent signs (check the image date!)

  • If Street View is fairly recent, you might see signs still posted

  • Write down the agent or broker and cross-reference, this could be a repeat flipper

  • Rent signs may also signal mom-and-pop landlords who are ready to sell

Section 5: Hidden Red Flags You Might Miss on MLS Photos

Google’s cameras don’t care about curb appeal. They shoot it all. That’s what makes them honest.

Nearby nuisances

  • Is there a gas station, liquor store, or pawn shop directly across the street?

  • High-voltage power lines overhead?

  • Train tracks right behind the property?

Industrial neighbors

  • Junkyards, auto shops, factories, anything loud, dirty, or smelly?

  • You’ll never see this in a wholesaler’s Dropbox link, but Street View doesn’t lie

Code violations

  • Boarded windows, broken fences, tarps on roofs = city is likely involvedTall grass and yard debris are often early signs of pre-foreclosure

Encroachments and lot usage

  • Is the neighbor’s shed built halfway onto your subject lot?

  • Any sign of shared driveways or easements that could create legal issues later?

Section 6: Time Travel with Street View (Hidden Gem)

Few investors realize this: you can go back in time with Google Street View.

Use this to evaluate how a neighborhood has changed, or hasn’t.

To access it:

  • Open Street View

  • Click the clock icon in the top-left (if available)

  • View images from past years (sometimes back to 2008)

What to look for:

  • Did the house sell recently and get updated?

  • Is the neighborhood improving or declining?

  • Has there been a recent teardown trend in the area?

By comparing multiple timeframes, you can see if the block is heating up or rotting slowly.

Section 7: Final Checklist,  Before You Move the Lead Forward

Use this Street View checklist to pre-screen each flip opportunity fast:

  • Subject Property

    • Roof, foundation, siding, parking, windows

    • General condition vs. age

  • Immediate Neighbors

    • Owner-occupied or rental dominated?

    • Visible maintenance levels

  • Street and Infrastructure

    • Sidewalks, street condition, tree cover, parking

    • Commercial or industrial interference

  • Investor Signals

    • Flips nearby, construction, dumpsters

    • Agents with multiple listings, flip clusters

  • Red Flags

    • Power lines, nuisances, and zoning issues

    • Signs of code enforcement

  • Historical Trend

    • Improvement or decline since prior images?

    • Is this neighborhood trending up or frozen in time?

Street View Is Your First Filter

Flipping houses isn’t just about running comps and estimating rehab.

It’s about reading the deal, and that starts with reading the street.

Google Street View gives you the most honest first impression available. No filters. No wide-angle tricks. Just cold, hard data hidden in plain sight.

Use it early. Use it often. And use it to say no to deals that aren’t worth your time, so you can say yes faster when the right one pops up.

Written By:

Austin Beveridge

Chief Operating Officer

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Discover

Join Thousands Of Satisfied Operators

Discover why top teams rely on Goliath to find motivated sellers. Get everything you need to prospect, nurture, and close more deals.

679

Live Users

$
23
M

Closed Deals

11
%

Satisfaction Rating

11
+

Markets Live